Court Rejects Government Bid to Dismiss 老澳门开奖结果-EFF Suit Challenging Warrantless Phone Searches at U.S. Border

Lawsuit on Behalf of 11 Travelers Challenges Searches of Electronics as Unconstitutional

May 10, 2018 1:30 pm

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BOSTON 鈥 A federal judge ruled today that a lawsuit challenging the government鈥檚 growing practice of searching electronics at the border without a warrant can proceed, rejecting the government鈥檚 attempt to have the case dismissed.

The 老澳门开奖结果, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the 老澳门开奖结果 of Massachusetts brought the case against the Department of Homeland Security last September on behalf of 11 travelers whose smartphones and laptops were searched without warrants at the U.S. border. The plaintiffs are 10 U.S. citizens and one lawful permanent resident who hail from seven states and come from a variety of backgrounds.

鈥淭his is a win for constitutional rights at the border,鈥 said 老澳门开奖结果 attorney Esha Bhandari, who argued the case last month. 鈥淭he court has rightly recognized the severity of the privacy violations that travelers face when the government conducts suspicionless border searches of electronics. We look forward to arguing this case on the merits and showing that these searches are unconstitutional.鈥

The court found that the plaintiffs can sue for violations of their Fourth Amendment and First Amendment rights.

鈥淭his is a big win for the digital rights of all international travelers,鈥 said EFF Staff Attorney Sophia Cope. 鈥淚n rejecting the government鈥檚 motion to dismiss the case, the court rightly concluded that the plaintiffs sufficiently alleged that the government's device search policies unconstitutionally burden privacy and free speech rights. As we鈥檝e long argued, the border is not a Constitution-free zone.鈥

Quoting a landmark 2014 Supreme Court opinion on cellphone privacy, U.S. District Court Judge Denise Casper wrote in her decision, 鈥淸E]lectronic device searches are, categorically, more intrusive than searches of one鈥檚 person or effects. The ability to review travelers鈥 cell phones allows officers to view 鈥榥early every aspect of their lives鈥攆rom the mundane to the intimate.鈥欌

Immigration and Customs Enforcement policy allows border agents to search and confiscate anyone鈥檚 smartphone for any reason or for no reason at all. Customs and Border Protection policy allows border device searches without a warrant or probable cause, and usually without even reasonable suspicion. Last year, CBP more than 30,000 border device searches, more than triple the number just two years earlier.

Plaintiff Diane Maye, a college professor and retired U.S. Air Force officer, was detained for two hours at Miami International Airport when coming home from a vacation in Europe in June.

Plaintiff Sidd Bikkannavar, an engineer for NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California, was detained at the Houston airport on the way home from vacation in Chile. A CPB officer demanded that he reveal the password for his phone. The officer returned the phone a half-hour later, saying that it had been searched using 鈥渁lgorithms.鈥

Another plaintiff was subjected to violence. Akram Shibly, an independent filmmaker who lives in upstate New York, was crossing the U.S.-Canada border after a social outing in the Toronto area in January when a CBP officer ordered him to hand over his phone. CBP had just searched his phone three days earlier when he was returning from a work trip in Toronto, so Shibly declined. Officers then physically restrained him, with one choking him and another holding his legs, and took his phone from his pocket. They kept the phone, which was already unlocked, for over an hour before giving it back.

Below is a full list of the plaintiffs along with links to their individual stories, which are also collected here:

  • Ghassan and Nadia Alasaad are a married couple who live in Massachusetts, where he is a limousine driver and she is a nursing student.
  • Suhaib Allababidi, who lives in Texas, owns and operates a business that sells security technology, including to federal government clients.
  • Sidd Bikkannavar is an optical engineer for NASA鈥檚 Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California.
  • Jeremy Dupin is a journalist living in Massachusetts.
  • Aaron Gach is an artist living in California.
  • Isma鈥檌l Kushkush is a journalist living in Virginia.
  • Diane Maye is a college professor and former captain in the U. S. Air Force living in Florida.
  • Zainab Merchant, from Florida, is a writer and a graduate student in international security and journalism at Harvard.
  • Akram Shibly is a filmmaker living in New York.
  • Matthew Wright is a computer programmer in Colorado.

Today鈥檚 ruling is here:
/legal-document/opinion-denying-governments-motion-dismiss


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